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British police made the case public on Wednesday (28 November), telling press that an initial post mortem was "inconclusive," that the coroner will now hold an inquest, including toxicology tests, and that a senior officer has been assigned to find out what happened.

Perepilichnyy had sought refuge in the UK after giving evidence on Olga Stepanova, a senior Russian tax official, to a Swiss prosecutor.

Stepanova is one of 60 Russian officials on a US travel ban list.

The US imposed the sanctions due to credible allegations that she was part of a conspiracy in 2009 to embezzle hundreds of millions of euros of Russian tax money and to murder an accountant, Sergei Magnitsky, who exposed the scam.

Other names on the list include senior officials in Russia's state security service, the FSB.

For some, the death recalls the murder in London in 2006 of Russian FSB officer-turned-informant, Alexander Litvinenko, in a case which damaged British-Russian relations.

"There were no signs of a violent death. But there weren't any in connection with Litvinenko either," Russian anti-corruption blogger Alexey Navalny wrote.

Senior people in Hermitage Capital, Magnitsky's former employers, who have campaigned for US and EU sanctions on his killers, have in the past also received death threats.

For his part, EU Council chief Herman Van Rompuy has called the Magnitsky case "emblematic" of what is wrong with modern Russia.

But EU foreign ministries have been unwilling to impose US-type punitive measures so far.

Hermitage Capital has also filed cases with prosecutors in six EU countries - Austria, Cyprus, Estonia, Finland, Latvia and Lithuania - alleging that their banks were used to launder the embezzled funds.

Opinion

EU foreign ministers will discuss Bosnia and Herzegovina on Monday. The EU has the opportunity to show that it is not a political dwarf in the Balkans, where not only economic, but also political reforms are necessary.